Barry University Physician Assistant Students Take the Hippocratic Oath During a Virtual White Coat Ceremony

Barry University Physician Assistant Students Take the Hippocratic Oath During a Virtual White Coat Ceremony

Ahead of beginning rotations in hospital and clinical settings, 100 Barry University Physician Assistant students wore their white coats together for the first time and took the Hippocratic Oath during a virtual ceremony on September 16, 2020. 

Medical Director, Dr. Richard Fien, led the next generation of health care heroes in the time-honored tradition, during which practitioners vow to uphold the standards of the profession. This important rite of passage for second year students celebrates their entrance into clinical practice.

“Today’s ceremony is transitional,” Dr. John McFadden, Dean of the College of Nursing and Health Sciences, told the students when discussing the significance of slipping on the white coat. “It says to others that you are actively adopting the identity of a health care professional in the way you reason and the way you act.”

In years past, the traditional white coats were bestowed during the formal ceremony, though this year plans were adjusted for the virtual program, with students receiving them in advance in order to mark the momentous occasion.

Ahead of reciting the Oath of Hippocrates, each student’s name was read aloud, and they were pictured on screen wearing their new white coat.

The Physician Assistant program is part of Barry’s College of Nursing and Health Sciences, which supports opportunities for developing skills in interprofessional collaboration. Physician Assistants are medical professionals who provide direct patient care, diagnosing illness, managing treatment and prescribing medications.

The students begin their rotations next week.